Supply Chain Management
In these changing economic conditions it is vital to harness surety of supply and value; as it is likely that competent suppliers and sub-contractors will not have an issue securing work moving forwards, it will be their ability to service the request which will be key.
The top five vulnerabilities of any supply chain, are generally acknowledged as:
Reliance on oil
Availability of shared data and information
Fragmentation along the value chain
Extensive sub-contracting
Supplier visibility
Whilst there are a number of approaches to risk and supply chain management which could be used, the following bullet points summarise the main activities which we believe deliver tangible improvements:
Concentrate on the most critical supply to the projects
Target the right supplier intelligence
Encourage stakeholders to take protective action
Increase supplier information sharing among
Internal stakeholders
Reduce supplier resistance to information sharing
To facilitate the above risk management and enhance resilience in the supply chain, we develop bespoke frameworks based on the following four principles:
Technology – use and expand data sharing platforms
Strategy-develop adaptable strategies for supply chain resilience
Policy – create a multistakeholder risk assessment process
Partnership – harmonise, develop and adopt
Fundamental to all of the above is the ability to build scalable supplier development and management programs that allow you to understand market capability and capacity, utilise suppliers’ full scope of competencies, improve their performance and achieve customer of choice status.
All of which will lead to being better positioned than your competitors to deal with and even gain advantage from the changing market conditions.